4.5 Article

Physiography of the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary and implications about continental margin development

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MARINE GEOLOGY
卷 181, 期 1-3, 页码 55-82

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0025-3227(01)00261-4

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submarine canyons; mass wasting; meanders; fluid-induced morphology; slump dams; sediment transport

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Combined EM-300 multibeam bathymetric data and satellite photography reveal the physiography of the continental margin between 35degrees50' and 37degrees03'N and from the shoreline west of 122degrees40' and 122degrees37'W, which includes Monterey Bay, in a previously unprecedented detail. Patterns in these images clearly reveal the processes that are actively influencing the current geomorphology of the Monterey Bay region, including the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary (MBNMS). Our data indicates that seafloor physiography within the MBNMS results from plate margin tectonic deformation, including uplift and erosion along structural lineaments, and from fluid flow. Mass wasting is the dominant process active within the Ascension-Monterey and Sur-Partington submarine canyon systems and along the lower slopes. Meanders, slump dams. and constricted channels within the submarine canyons, especially within Monterey Canyon, slow and interrupt down-canyon sediment transport. We have identified for the first time thin sediment flows, rotational slumps, rills, depressions that may be associated with pipes, and other fluid-induced features we call 'scallops off the Ascension slope, and suggest that fluid flow has sculptured the seafloor morphologies here. These unusual seafloor morphologies are similar to morphologies found in terrestrial areas modified by ground-water flow. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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